Daniel Cary
AH legend
I have used the Regular Black Cloud not the high velocity ones for Ducks/Geese. Trying them to offset the ridiculous price of Hevi Shot.Throwing clays with these out of a Coach gun is .. ridiculous
However, these have some Snot! for a 3"
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I had to save some .. @BeeMaa, etc. has anyone heard or used these?
thank you.
I was shocked @ the cost, in comparison to what was here (not familiar with too much) .. but what raucousI have used the Regular Black Cloud not the high velocity ones for Ducks/Geese. Trying them to offset the ridiculous price of Hevi Shot.
Excellent read,I use the Federal Black Cloud TSS BB/7 for geese and 3/9 for ducks. This is a center of smaller TSS pellets surrounded by larger Flight Stopper Steel. What you end up with is a center pattern of tight TSS pellets with a ring of larger steel ones like this...
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I have found the Federal BC shown below to absolutely suck on the pattern board at distances greater than 25 yards. To the point that I used the pattern sheets to start a campfire that evening on the farm. I have a few boxes of this that I keep around for dispatching wounded birds because it's less expensive than the TSS BB/7.
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The stuff you are talking about using is moving at nearly 200 fps faster than what I have. In my experience, speed of the payload has diminishing returns. There comes a point where the pattern gets blown out and you run a great risk of wounding birds and not recovering them.
There is a big difference between being able to hit a clay and make a lethal shot on a goose. These animals are HARD to kill. You can hit them at 60 yards, but the pellets need to have the energy to penetrate to the point of being lethal. Even at that speed it would be very difficult.
I passed on several shots that were at or over 50 yards for this very reason. Our first day we took 17 birds and had only three that needed finishing by using the BC TSS load.
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If you can, set up a pattern board and give it a try I would be interested in the results. Keep in mind that what works in one shotgun doesn't mean it will work in another. I've always recommended testing your shotgun/load/choke combination before hitting the field.
With steel #4 shot moving at that speed, I would think it would be more of a duck load than goose. Most goose loads are at least #2 shot, but normally B, BB or BBB.
BTW - For shooting clays, I use whatever is cheap. Usually a Federal target load that's around 1 1/4 oz at 1150 or 1200 fps in 7.5, 8 or 9 shot. Nothing special. The difference in speed is very minimal when it comes to changing your lead. I would NEVER use this Federal BC HV load on a clays range, especially in such a light shotgun.
@Daniel CaryThrowing clays with these out of a Coach gun is .. ridiculous
However, these have some Snot! for a 3"
View attachment 633423
View attachment 633424
I had to save some .. @BeeMaa, etc. has anyone heard or used these?
thank you.
Like to see a pattern board at 40 yards if you have one.Regular black cloud patterns pretty well out of my 870 and BGH, though really no better than Win HV. Haven't tried the 1635.
Agreed. I’ve found that the HV patterns are much larger for any given distance with all other things being equal. My only explanation for it is the added velocity actually separates the pellets more quickly. In essence “blowing out” what would otherwise be a not too bad pattern.High velocity shotshells are really a gimmick. The sphere shape of a pellet is terrible aerodynamically. Worse if it has the silly "belt" around it that some makers use. The drag on individual pellets increases dramatically with an increase in velocity. So much so that at longer ranges the high velocity loads are going no faster than loads launched at more sedate speeds. At 40 yards there would be little difference. Very hard on the shooter and their wallet.
As to patterning… good, worthwhile exercise for any serious shotgunner.Simply, fun gun to shoot .. can beat it up